Bing bing bing.........
They have to color it up that way so they can sleep at night.Fuggn bunch of shit bag Donkhole fans.Fukk'em all!
Knowshit cant help it,he came over here posting articles and stats,and claiming AFCW titles and shit and now they have nothing to show for it except a POS HC that has set the team back years in the AFC.He's a douche bag of epic proportions and knows his team is all FAIL!
Fukk the Donkholes!!

When the Jets played the Bengals on Sunday night, the Broncos had already been eliminated from playoff contention. The Jets game determined other teams playoff aspirations, not yours. And why is it that everytime Orton sucks it's because he is hurt? Is he Brodie's older brother or something?

If the Broncos won they still wouldn't have made the playoffs so that makes the Chiefs game 100% meaningless.

Orton didn't suck. Only Peyton Manning and Aaron Rodgers had more games with a QB rating above 90 than Orton. Orton playing with a broken bone in his finger for the first 6 weeks and a badly sprained ankle the last 6 weeks makes his performance look even more impressive.

If the Broncos won they still wouldn't have made the playoffs so that makes the Chiefs game 100% meaningless.

Orton didn't suck. Only Peyton Manning and Aaron Rodgers had more games with a QB rating above 90 than Orton. Orton playing with a broken bone in his finger for the first 6 weeks and a badly sprained ankle the last 6 weeks makes his performance look even more impressive.

Getting your ass handed to you big time,by a division rival at home when you need a win is never meaningless.Only a Donkhole scumbag can color it up and try to flip it this way.You know your whole season meant shit when we smashed you like the frauds you were in front of your own damn fans and made you like it.

If the Broncos won they still wouldn't have made the playoffs so that makes the Chiefs game 100% meaningless.

Orton didn't suck. Only Peyton Manning and Aaron Rodgers had more games with a QB rating above 90 than Orton. Orton playing with a broken bone in his finger for the first 6 weeks and a badly sprained ankle the last 6 weeks makes his performance look even more impressive.

Don't you just love how after we crushed them like grapes at Pile High,the game never mattered at all? That loss at home broke them as a team and smashed their fan base to its core.There was more fire McDipshit calling after that loss than at any point in the season.They know they lived on a prayer and got caught trying to compete as an actual NF team.We see how that turned out vs the Chiefs @ Pile High.

Don't you just love how after we crushed them like grapes at Pile High,the game never mattered at all? That loss at home broke them as a team and smashed their fan base to its core.There was more fire McDipshit calling after that loss than at any point in the season.They know they lived on a prayer and got caught trying to compete as an actual NF team.We see how that turned out vs the Chiefs @ Pile High.

Suck it fuggn Donk puke bags!

It's so cute when Chiefs fan tries to run smack. You vicious chihuaha you.

It's so cute when Chiefs fan tries to run smack. You vicious chihuaha you.

It's even funnier when you guys come over here talking smack and we smash you at home and humiliate you to no end.That is good.As usual you Donkhole fans let your bulldog mouths over load your puppy dog asses!It has to hurt knowing the most complete team Dungver has had in years,got destroyed at Pile High by one of the worst Chiefs teams in years.Have fun watching Josh McDidntmaketheplayoffs run off the rest of your good players.Just like your playoff hopes,die slow fukk bag!

If the Broncos won they still wouldn't have made the playoffs so that makes the Chiefs game 100% meaningless.

Orton didn't suck. Only Peyton Manning and Aaron Rodgers had more games with a QB rating above 90 than Orton. Orton playing with a broken bone in his finger for the first 6 weeks and a badly sprained ankle the last 6 weeks makes his performance look even more impressive.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Don Martindale notified the hostess he and his son would be ready for a table, just as soon as his good friend and mentor joined him.

A minute or two later, Rex Ryan stepped up to the Pro Bowl hotel restaurant, ready for lunch. By the looks of them, Martindale and Ryan weren't going to be ordering watercress salads.

Was Ryan, who is now head coach of the defensive-oriented New York Jets, surprised that Martindale was promoted to his first NFL defensive coordinator gig by the Broncos?

"No," Ryan said. "He's not a first-year guy. He's been with the Ryan family forever."

"I've been with the Ryans for about 12 years," Martindale said. "It's that type of mentality, get guys playing hard. Schematically, you don't tip what you're going to do. But mostly, I know our guys are going to play hard, and we're going to be fun to watch."

If the Mannings — Archie, Peyton and Eli — are the first family of quarterbacks, the Ryans — Buddy, Rex and Rob — are the most prominent tribe of NFL defenses.

Martindale is part of the Ryan family. He may work directly for Broncos head coach Josh McDaniels now, but much of his defensive coaching education came from the Ryans. Martindale was part of Rex Ryan's defensive staff at the University of Cincinnati in 1996-97 and coached linebackers for Rob Ryan with the Oakland Raiders from 2004-08.

"Wink's going to be great, no question," Ryan said. "I told him he can finish second in the league."

The numbers say Ryan is the best defensive coach around. His Jets ranked No. 1 in total defense this past season, while his previous team, the Baltimore Ravens, ranked No. 2 in 2008.

The Broncos were No. 1 through six games in 2009 with Mike Nolan as defensive coordinator and Martindale as linebackers coach. But the Broncos' defensive performance fell precipitously in the final 10 games.

Showing he already has one vital characteristic of becoming a quality defensive coordinator, Martindale doesn't pretend to know more than anyone else.

"It's hard to pinpoint one thing," said Martindale, who is here at the Pro Bowl as a guest of the prominent linebacker he coached this year, Elvis Dumervil. "If I had all the answers, we wouldn't have had that problem. I think it was the accumulation of things as a team. Just coming together, and staying together and working in unison. We saw that formula works. We saw that in the beginning of the year."

In the 3-4 defensive system, Ryan and Martindale trust. And yes, Martindale knows how to scheme the famed "46" defense devised by Buddy, the Ryan patriarch, in the mid- 1980s with the Chicago Bears.

Mike Nolan is another common link between Rex Ryan and Martindale. Nolan was the Baltimore Ravens' defensive coordinator until he left in 2005 to become head coach in San Francisco. His job in Baltimore was filled by Ryan.

Nolan returned to Denver and the defensive coordinator position in 2009, until he left two weeks ago to take the same position with the Miami Dolphins. His job with the Broncos was filled by Martindale.

Oftentimes, an awkward strain can develop in a relationship when an underling succeeds his boss. Not so between Nolan and Martindale.

"He called and congratulated me," Martindale said. "I told him I was glad he left so I could take his job."